"The honorary award was created for artists like Jackie Chan, Anne Coates, Lynn Stalmaster and Frederick Wiseman — true pioneers and legends in their crafts," said Academy president Cheryl Boone Isaacs.

Chan’s Hollywood breakthrough came with Rumble in the Bronx in 1996, and he has gone on to be become a global star through the Rush Hour movies, Shanghai Noon, The Karate Kid and the Kung Fu Panda series of animated films.

Coates, who is 90 and lives in England, won an Oscar for her work on David Lean’s Lawrence of Arabia and in more than 60 years as a film editor has collaborated with some of the industry’s most acclaimed directors.

Stalmaster, 88, a one-time stage and screen actor from Omaha, Nebraska, began working in casting in the mid-1950s and has signed up talent for more than 200 films, including The Graduate, Deliverance and Tootsie.

Wiseman, 86, has made a film almost every year since 1967, starting with the Titicut Follies, which went behind the scenes at Bridgewater State Hospital for the criminally insane.

The Governors Awards were created as a separate event in 2009 to allow more space for the honorees to accept their statuettes and to declutter the main show’s packed schedule.